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Top CEO stabbed to death at his luxury mansion during house party as boy, 15, charged with murder

Top CEO stabbed to death at his luxury mansion during house party as boy, 15, charged with murder

The Irish Sun15 hours ago

A TOP CEO was stabbed to death in a horror knife attack during a party packed with teenagers at his luxury mansion - before police arrested a 15-year-old boy.
Australian entrepreneur Greg Josephson was hosting a large gathering of 30 or so teens at his home in Brisbane at the time of the deadly
4
Greg Josephson (L), CEO of Universal Stores, was stabbed to death in Australia
4
He was attacked at his luxury mansion in Clayfield, Brisbane
Credit: 9 news
4
Police arrested a 15-year-old and charged the teen with murder
Credit: 9 news
The businessman, 58, was the co-founder of youth clothing company Universal Store, which he and his brother Michael created in 1999.
Josephson knew the alleged killer before the two got into an altercation around 8:15pm on Thursday, Queensland police said.
The 15-year-old allegedly used a household item to carry out the attack.
Queensland Police Acting Assistant Commissioner Rhys Wildman said: "There was some sort of altercation that resulted in this 58-year-old male tragically losing his life.
"It's not a case of carrying knives, it's unfortunately allotted in a home."
Police rushed to the house in Clayfield, Australia, and found the CEO critically wounded.
He was later pronounced dead at the scene.
Cops immediately launched a manhunt and were able to locate the teenager two blocks south of Josephson's home.
Most read in The US Sun
The child was charged with murder after being questioned and is currently being held without bail.
Police detective Craig Williams said: "I can confirm that there was a party under way at the house with a number of young persons."
Knifeman storms Andrew Tate's compound in Romania stabbing worker, 53, on disgraced influencer's property
He explained that most of the teens were completely unaware of the
"It was a confusing situation," Williams added.
A number of teenagers who were at the home during when the knife attack took place are now speaking with police.
Universal Store specializes in trend-led clothing for men and women, with its
target
audience age being 15 to 34, according to their website.
His company was sold to a consortium of private equity investors in 2018 for $100million.
Josephson had been chief executive of Josephson Holdings Pty Ltd. since 2018, according to his LinkedIn.
He appeared to have kept a relatively low public profile.
Universal Store announced Josephson's death in a heartbreaking statement.
They said: "We wanted to share the sad news that Greg Josephson, who founded our company and played a significant role until 2018, has recently passed away.
"Our sincere thoughts and condolences are with his family at this very sad time."
The tragic boss had bought the six-bed, six-bath "five-star" mansion back in 2016 for $1.25million.
The three-storey pad, tucked away in Brisbane's upmarket Clayfield suburb, was transformed in 2022, according to 7News.
The home is now estimated to be worth a whopping $3.2million.
Josephson had recently listed the
luxury
property on the market as he planned to move his family north to Noosa.
Read more on the Irish Sun
Some said the party was very quiet before the fatal attack.
One neighbor told the Courier Mail: "It was extremely quiet, I wouldn't have even known there was a party going on last night."
4
He co-founded a clothing store with his brother in 1999
Credit: Linkedin

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Top CEO stabbed to death at his luxury mansion during house party as boy, 15, charged with murder
Top CEO stabbed to death at his luxury mansion during house party as boy, 15, charged with murder

The Irish Sun

time15 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Top CEO stabbed to death at his luxury mansion during house party as boy, 15, charged with murder

A TOP CEO was stabbed to death in a horror knife attack during a party packed with teenagers at his luxury mansion - before police arrested a 15-year-old boy. Australian entrepreneur Greg Josephson was hosting a large gathering of 30 or so teens at his home in Brisbane at the time of the deadly 4 Greg Josephson (L), CEO of Universal Stores, was stabbed to death in Australia 4 He was attacked at his luxury mansion in Clayfield, Brisbane Credit: 9 news 4 Police arrested a 15-year-old and charged the teen with murder Credit: 9 news The businessman, 58, was the co-founder of youth clothing company Universal Store, which he and his brother Michael created in 1999. Josephson knew the alleged killer before the two got into an altercation around 8:15pm on Thursday, Queensland police said. The 15-year-old allegedly used a household item to carry out the attack. Queensland Police Acting Assistant Commissioner Rhys Wildman said: "There was some sort of altercation that resulted in this 58-year-old male tragically losing his life. "It's not a case of carrying knives, it's unfortunately allotted in a home." Police rushed to the house in Clayfield, Australia, and found the CEO critically wounded. He was later pronounced dead at the scene. Cops immediately launched a manhunt and were able to locate the teenager two blocks south of Josephson's home. Most read in The US Sun The child was charged with murder after being questioned and is currently being held without bail. Police detective Craig Williams said: "I can confirm that there was a party under way at the house with a number of young persons." Knifeman storms Andrew Tate's compound in Romania stabbing worker, 53, on disgraced influencer's property He explained that most of the teens were completely unaware of the "It was a confusing situation," Williams added. A number of teenagers who were at the home during when the knife attack took place are now speaking with police. Universal Store specializes in trend-led clothing for men and women, with its target audience age being 15 to 34, according to their website. His company was sold to a consortium of private equity investors in 2018 for $100million. Josephson had been chief executive of Josephson Holdings Pty Ltd. since 2018, according to his LinkedIn. He appeared to have kept a relatively low public profile. Universal Store announced Josephson's death in a heartbreaking statement. They said: "We wanted to share the sad news that Greg Josephson, who founded our company and played a significant role until 2018, has recently passed away. "Our sincere thoughts and condolences are with his family at this very sad time." The tragic boss had bought the six-bed, six-bath "five-star" mansion back in 2016 for $1.25million. The three-storey pad, tucked away in Brisbane's upmarket Clayfield suburb, was transformed in 2022, according to 7News. The home is now estimated to be worth a whopping $3.2million. Josephson had recently listed the luxury property on the market as he planned to move his family north to Noosa. Read more on the Irish Sun Some said the party was very quiet before the fatal attack. One neighbor told the Courier Mail: "It was extremely quiet, I wouldn't have even known there was a party going on last night." 4 He co-founded a clothing store with his brother in 1999 Credit: Linkedin

Murdered Peter Falconio's grieving mum gives heartbreaking prediction after Outback Killer vows ‘deathbed declaration'
Murdered Peter Falconio's grieving mum gives heartbreaking prediction after Outback Killer vows ‘deathbed declaration'

The Irish Sun

timea day ago

  • The Irish Sun

Murdered Peter Falconio's grieving mum gives heartbreaking prediction after Outback Killer vows ‘deathbed declaration'

THE mum of murdered British backpacker Peter Falconio fears his killer, who is close to death with throat cancer, will never reveal where her son's body lies. The Advertisement 5 Peter Falconio was murdered in the outback in 2001 and his body has never been found 5 He was murdered by Bradley John Murdoch - who is now close to death with cancer Credit: AFP 5 Peter was shot dead whilst his girlfriend managed to escape prison , was set to make an "explosive" deathbed confession. There was confusion over whether he would take his secret with him or had "forgotten" where he dumped the traveller's remains. She said of the wheelchair-bound murderer: "We think he'll take that with him to the grave." "We just want to bring our son home after all these years but we're not sure we ever will. We don't think that will every happen." Advertisement Asked how she felt about the She revealed the family was not initially informed by either the British or Australian authorities that Murdoch was dying in hospital. They were contacted following major media attention across the globe. Speaking from her home near Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, where she lives with husband Luciano, 80, Joan said: "As a family we are doing alright, life just has to go on." Advertisement Most read in The Sun Breaking Exclusive Exclusive Joan, 77, who has three other sons, said they haven't travelled to Australia since a memorial was placed for 28-year-old Peter at a random spot in the Outback in 2016, which she described as "most fitting." She said: "We've not been out there, it is a long way, and we are not in the best of health ." 'Killer' told man he 'tortured to death he was going to s**g his ex' Murdoch was convicted in 2005 of shooting dead Peter and ambushing his Brit girlfriend Joanne Lees before she made a harrowing escape on the night of July 14, 2001. The backpacker's body has never been found. Advertisement Joan said: "We think he'll take that to the grave in his final act." He had tricked the couple as they drove on a remote highway between Alice Springs and Darwin in their VW Kombi camper van on a dream trip. The ruthless drug runner and murderer is now wheelchair-bound and "just about dead", a source has told the Northern Territory News . Joan has previously said: "My son's life stopped on a lonely road - shot dead by cowardly Murdoch, who will not reveal where or what he did with him. Advertisement 5 Murdoch has been transferred to palliative care to live out his final days Credit: Getty 5 A toolbox containing cable ties and tape was presented as evidence to the jury Credit: Getty "Our pain is always with us. We want to bring Peter home where he belongs, near his family." The lead investigator into the death of the tragic traveller has this week revealed that his killer will likely die before helping to locate his body. Advertisement News of his terminal cancer battle prompted Northern Territory police to double their reward for information that led to the location to $500,000. Read more on the Irish Sun Former NT police officer Colleen Gwynne has suggested the killer may not know where the body is body, reportedly saying: "There is potential that, with the stress that (Murdoch) was under, the fact that Joanne escaped and he had a victim that was now at large, that he may have forgotten exactly where he disposed of the body." However, true crime author Robin Bowles claims that the killer, jailed for life, will make an "explosive" deathbed statement to him but not share with detectives. Peter Falconio case timeline by Harvey Geh PETER Falconio was shot dead in the Australian outback while travelling with girlfriend Joanne Lees in July 2001. He was 28 years old when he was tragically shot by a man who flagged down the van he was driving. The man was 43-year-old drug smuggler Bradley John Murdoch. Murdoch shot Falconio in the head before bundling Lees into his car and binding her with cable ties. She managed to escape and hide in bushes for five hours, before she ran into the road and waved down a passing truck. Lees soon became a prime suspect in her boyfriend's murder after claims she appeared "emotionless" after the incident. But it was later revealed she had taken the sedative Valium to help her handle her horror ordeal. Police were never able to locate Falconio's remains. Reports in February 2023 detailed that police had found some bones near Alice Springs that were being tested to see if they were the remains of Peter Falconio. The reports were later rubbished with authorities stating: 'No human remains have been located by Northern Territory Police, and a search is not currently being conducted." Murdoch has launched several appeals against his conviction, but he remains in prison in the Northern Territory. He will be 74 years old when he is eligible for parole in 2032.

Inside the face scanning tech behind social media age limits
Inside the face scanning tech behind social media age limits

RTÉ News​

time2 days ago

  • RTÉ News​

Inside the face scanning tech behind social media age limits

As age restrictions on social media gain political momentum, biometric software is being explored as a way to effectively enforce any potential laws. However, critics warn that privacy and surveillance issues could arise if these tools become more widespread in policing the internet. So, should this technology be used to build a safer, more secure internet? Politicians in Australia are pushing ahead with plans to ban under-16s from social media, and early findings from a government-backed trial suggest biometric software could be central to enforcing a ban. Yoti, a London-based tech firm, is a leader in age estimation technology and participant in the Australian research. Already used by platforms like Instagram, Yoti says its software can scan faces to estimate age without storing personal data. It says it can tell the age of 13 to 17-year-olds within an median margin of error of 1.3 years and 18 to 24-year-olds within 2.2 years. Better, it says, than human judgment. The face scanning technology captures a live selfie and apps and websites embed the software and apply their desired age threshold. Prime Time visited Yoti's headquarters to test the system. It correctly identified that I was over 18 but like most users I wasn't given the opportunity to find out exactly what my estimated age was, just that I had met the threshold. Yoti CEO Robin Tombs said the software has a vast capacity to look at patterns, making it "much more accurate at estimating age than a human would be." While the Australian government-commissioned trials backed the use of age assurance technologies, it did raise issues with the accuracy of some systems. People tend to misunderstand what working effectively means, Mr Tombs explained, adding that an accurate estimate to within a number of months of age is "very, very hard to do." Yoti says that 99.3% of 13 to 17-year-olds are correctly estimated as under 21. Companies using the software often set a higher buffer age to account for the technology's limits; however this increases the risk of wrongly restricting access of some adults. Dublin social media star Edel Lawless explained to Prime Time what happened when she failed a digital age test on TikTok. The platform requires users who want to broadcast live to verify that they are over 18. After being directed to take a live selfie to prove her age, Ms Lawless, who was 18 at the time, told the programme she was rejected. "I think my baby face didn't allow it. I don't think it's a very good way of estimating someone's age." The now 19-year-old had to submit a photo of herself holding her age card before she could proceed. Yoti contends that notwithstanding false negatives or positives in its age estimations, the vast majority of people benefit from ease of use and not having to submit documents to prove their age. It is also very hard to game or trick the system, Mr Tombs said. The live selfie process limits the potential for AI generated images to be used while the software is also sophisticated enough to recognise if someone is wearing a mask or other disguise. But digital rights campaigners have warned that age estimation systems can contain biases. "It's a normalisation of biometric surveillance that we've worked against for many years," Ella Jakubowska, Head of Policy at European Digital Rights told the programme. Biometric software has been historically trained on white, male faces. In 2021, Facebook apologised when an AI image tool was identifying black men as non-human primates. Yoti insists the technology has improved in the last decade and the 125,000 images it bases its model on cover all ages, three skin types and both genders. The company's own test results show that although there are differences in the age estimation between different groups "they are not material," according to Mr Tombs. UK Digital rights group Big Brother Watch described the moves towards age assurance technologies as a knee jerk reaction to a more complex and wider discussion around internet safety and moderation. The rate of false negatives threatens free speech and free access to the internet, the group believes. "There are many people who are above the age of 18 but may for a host of reasons not pass an age assurance test. Adults have an important right to access legal content online," Advocacy Manager, Matthew Feeney told Prime Time. "I don't think we want to lurch into a world where the most powerful communications platform we have in the history of our species is one where you need to step through a security booth in order to access it." Requiring a face scan or age documents for adults to access certain content, potentially of a sensitive or adult nature presents risks of surveillance, the group contends. "We don't want to live in a world where people feel like they cannot visit information they want or say what they believe because they don't feel like they have privacy online," Mr Feeney added. Activists have also raised concerns over how facial scans are processed and stored. The Yoti database is derived from an earlier product, a digital ID app in which users uploaded their image and proof of age with permission for the company to build up a large, anonymous database. It insists the selfies uploaded today are not saved and privacy is paramount. Stricter regulation is also being implemented in many jurisdictions around storing and processing personal images. "Regulators are requiring faces to be destroyed, deleted immediately, and not used for any other purpose. I think people do trust that if a regulator requires that, it would be very risky for a big brand or Yoti to not comply with those regulations," CEO Robin Tombs said. But even if the software is effective and properly regulated, the risk of adding age restrictions to parts of the internet could lead to a less vibrant online society and a tech environment with safeguards that may not achieve what they're intended to, according to Big Brother Watch. "What I'm worried about is that these kinds of regulations are going to incentivize children to go into the dark web, to use encrypted web browsers, to get into places where it's actually much, much harder to moderate where they're going," Matthew Feeney explained. "There are websites all across the world that make YouTube, Instagram look relatively tame." Social media ban debate Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has said its world-leading legislation will protect young people from the "harms" of social media adding that the onus will be on platforms to demonstrate they are taking reasonable steps to prevent access to those under 16. A similar law should be considered here, Tánaiste Simon Harris has said, describing smartphone use as a "ticking time bomb". The Irish Medical Organisation also debated a motion to consider such a move at its recent AGM. But there isn't consensus on the merits or efficacy of such bans. In the UK, the Technology Secretary Peter Kyle has backed away from following the Australian path. Campaigners argue social media platforms themselves should police their content and algorithms to be less harmful for everyone, not just children. "It feels like a really unsophisticated solution," Ella Jakubowska of European Digital Rights told Prime Time. "Any sledgehammer approach that tries to cut young people out of the internet is missing the point that there's a lot we need to do to keep all people safe from platforms. Imposing age gates on internet access will disempower both adults and children, she argued. "All the evidence shows that young people are the most resilient and the most able to deal with online harms when they have a parent or guardian or other adult figure that they can confide in that helps them navigate the internet safely and in ways that build resilience, not just shutting them out," Ms Jakubowska said. Distinct from any potential social media ban, next month the first age assurance regulations will come into force in Ireland requiring video sharing platforms that allow pornographic or gratuitously violent content to have "effective" age assurance. Self-declaration by users will not be accepted. However, as most social media companies that are based here already prohibit such content and most adult sites are based outside of the country, users are unlikely to see a significant impact in the short term. Europe, meanwhile, is moving towards more harmonised age assurance standards with some countries like Germany and France already requiring stricter age verification. The Commission has recently recommended that the highest form of age assurance – age verification with documentation – is necessary in certain cases such as alcohol, pornographic content, or gambling. A digital identity wallet is being developed to let users verify their age without directly sharing personal information with online platforms. The plan is for identity documents to be securely stored in an EU-wide app. The large tech companies are also steeling themselves for a battle over how future age assurance requirements are enforced. Social media platforms have argued that such verification should be done at the app-store or operating system level, rather than by each individual app. Digital rights campaigners remain concerned about the use of facial scanning generally. Oppressive States have historically exploited data putting campaigners and members of marginalised groups, among others, at risk, Ella Jakubowska said. "I'm aware that we can sometimes sound as if we're being a bit cynical or doomsdayish but it's legitimate to be aware of the potential of creating mass surveillance systems," Ms Jakubowska said. Beyond social media Regulators are also now grappling with broader questions around AI and what decisions it should be allowed to make. Should AI be permitted to decide who gets a job or a bank loan? Or what about who is served in a retail store? Ireland's largest shop-fitting company expects new age estimation screens to be in stores within months. At the showroom of Mercury Retail Services, MD Garry Doyle explained how vape stores are among the potential clients of the new technology. "With the growth of age-restricted sales it's really important that a retailer is able to give their staff the tools they need to be able to make the decisions at the till," Mr Doyle explained. A tablet screen is positioned facing customers to scan their face and indicate if they meet a set age threshold. When I tested the system, it accurately verified that I was over 21, confirming this with a green light after scanning my face. It gives business owners a tool to show they are taking their responsibilities seriously, Mr Doyle said. "It's not saying you can't serve this customer. It's helping the retailer make an informed decision of whether they need to ask for identification." Contending that Ireland is a long way away from a purely autonomous 24-hour store, Mr Doyle added: "I don't think you'll ever get to a situation whereby you are replacing shop staff with AI because retail in Ireland is about the experience and relationships that retailers have with their customers." As biometric age estimation technologies become increasingly integrated into online platforms and everyday interactions, governments and regulators will be tasked with navigating a complex and delicate balance - ensuring that measures designed to protect vulnerable users, particularly children, do not come at the expense of individual privacy, civil liberties, and digital freedom.

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